City to monitor traffic as plan to limit cars on Mount Royal begins - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:08 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

City to monitor traffic as plan to limit cars on Mount Royal begins

Not all motorists have been won over by the Plante administration's plan to close a stretch of Camillien-Houde Way to car traffic until Oct. 31.

A 550-metre stretch of Camillien-Houde Way is closed to car traffic until Oct. 31

Camillien-Houde Way was closed to through traffic Saturday for a pilot project that will last until Oct. 31. The city's move to close the stretch of road has been controversial ever since it was proposed. (CBC)

NDGresident Michael Silaswas a regular user of Camillien-Houde Way, the road that crosses Mount Royal. That is,until it was closed to through traffic this weekend.

The city says the stretch is being overrun by motorists, who use it as a shortcut to get across Montreal, butSilas says that's an exaggeration and he has"rarely" dealtwith traffic there.

For the next five months, though, his commute to work in the Plateau will take an extra 10 minutes and require the use of a highway.

But, Silas says, it's not the length of the drive that upsets him. "It's the fact that I don't get to enjoy a scenic route on my way to work anymore," he told CBC Montreal'sDaybreak Monday.

A 550-metre stretch ofCamillien-HoudeWay, which turns into Remembrance Road as it nearsCte-des-Neiges Road, is now closed off to car traffic. Only cyclists, city, school and tourist buses, emergency vehicles and funeral processions will be able to drive on it until Oct. 31.

All other vehicles will be forced to stop at the Smith House parking lotif they're travelling from the east and at the Beaver Lake parking lot coming from the west.

Silas was one of about 75 people who attended a public information session on the plan last month. (Navneet Pall/CBC)

The controversial decision to close the road cameafter an18-year-old cyclist,Clment Ouimet, died when hecollided with an SUVthat pulled an illegal U-turn in front of his bicycle on Camillien-Houdelast year.

In February, Plateau-Mont-Royal borough Mayor Luc Ferrandez said the road, which connects the Plateau-Mont-Royal and Cte-des-Neiges neighbourhoods, has become a freeway with 10,000 cars circulating on it every day.

Making Camillien-Houde what it was meant to be?

The city had information agents out on Mount Royal Monday morning informing motorists of the closure.

It will be monitoring what happens to other roads, such as Pine andDoctor Penfieldavenues and Cte-Ste-Catherine Road, as a result of the pilot project, saidProjetMontralborough councillor AlainVaillancourt.

Vaillancourt said while he understands Silas's concerns, there are also people who want the road to be safer, and "what it was destined to be: a park road where you can enjoy the mountain with less cars."

The pilot project still provides "a lot" of access to the mountain, he said, and some people who were initially apprehensive about the plan eventually change their minds once it's explained to them.

Public consultation underway

The body that oversees the city's public consultations, the Office de consultationpubliquedeMontral, is also collectinginformation online from citizens about how the closure is going.

The city had originally said itwouldn't holdpublic consultationson the project under its recently revamped system, butlater changed its tune.

Silassays the issue is an important one, and he urgedpeople to get involved and have their voices heard.

Camillien-Houde Way connects the Plateau-Mont-Royal and Cte-des-Neiges neighbourhoods. (Charles Contant/CBC)

He says any decision on the road's future should be based on the result of the consultation process.

"If an issue this big can get forced and steam-rolled through Montreal without Montrealers really having a say, what else is on the chopping block? What else can be done right under our noses without us having a say whatsoever?"

With files from CBC Montreal's Daybreak